As the University of Alaska grapples with budget cuts, its leader may leave

University of Alaska President Jim Johnsen delivers the State of the University Address at a Juneau Chamber of Commerce luncheon in Juneau on Feb. 16, 2017.
University of Alaska President Jim Johnsen delivers the State of the University Address at a Juneau Chamber of Commerce luncheon in Juneau on Feb. 16, 2017. (Photo by Skip Gray/360 North)

The head of Alaska’s public university system is potentially leaving the state to take over the helm of the University of Wisconsin System.

The UW system announced Tuesday that Johnsen was the sole finalist to become its president. Johnsen will go through multiple interviews next week for the job.

Johnsen’s possible departure from the University of Alaska system comes at a tumultuous time for UA. The university system is wrestling with another series of deep budget gaps driven by cuts to state funding, declining enrollment and the coronavirus pandemic.

In an email to UA students and employees on Tuesday, Johnsen wrote that he wasn’t looking for another job when he was nominated for the position in Wisconsin, “but the position aligns with my experience and skills as a university leader.”

“The opportunity to lead a larger university is an exciting prospect, and Madison is in very close proximity to our family,” Johnsen wrote.

Johnsen was named UA president in 2015. Under his leadership, he spearheaded efforts to consolidate the university system amid declining state funding. That effort was met with widespread pushback, and the UA Board of Regents tabled the idea last year after the governor walked back his budget veto. The governing body is expected to discuss a controversial option later this week to merge the University of Alaska Southeast into the system’s other universities.

The University of Wisconsin System is a constellation of 26 campuses. It’s one of the country’s largest systems of public higher education.

In its announcement Tuesday, the Wisconsin system said its presidential search committee unanimously agreed on Johnsen as its first choice as a finalist, describing him as a strong, qualified and collaborative leader. It also said the pandemic posed “unanticipated and unprecedented circumstances and obstacles” to the search.

“Several candidates removed their names from consideration near the end of the process, with some expressing concern over being named publicly as a finalist during the pandemic,” the announcement said.

Johnsen wrote that he will be in discussions next week with the Wisconsin committee and the university community, and expects the outcome of those talks by mid-June.

This story has been updated.

 

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